From what has already been testified to (by prosecution witnesses, oddly enough), there wasn't anything wrong with Zimmerman's getting out of the truck to determine which way the suspicious person went.Cedar Park Dad wrote:Fair points.
Call from the truck. Stay in the truck. Meet the police where they say you are supposed to meet them.
Day 2 testimony of Wendy Dorival, Sanford Police Department, Neighborhood Watch Program:
ETA: And based on Z's statements and the evidence so far, it was hardly Z's choice to engage Martin.West focused in on that comment, asking, “when you say the shouldn’t follow someone, you’re not saying that if you see someone suspicious that you can’t follow at a distance to gather information, are you? You don’t tell people that they can’t follow someone from a distance, do you?”
“That’s right,” Dorival agreed, she was not saying that, but rather that it was not a good idea to engage someone.
Day 2 testimony of Donald O’Brien, President Twin Lakes Home Owners Association:
Guess they were just stupid too. Or, perhaps just lucky that the guy they followed didn't turn around and attack them.He also recounted an interesting story about a particular robbery in the community. What made this burglary memorable to O’Brien was that he had actually gotten into a conversation with the soon-to-be-burglar only a short time before the crime occurred. The burglar–whom O’Brien described as a 17-year-old black man–chatted with O’Brien a while, and later was seen by some nearby construction workers leaving a townhouse later discovered to have been burgled.
A few days later, these same workers observed the same 17-year-old black man wandering through Twin Lakes again. They contacted the police, and the burglar was successfully arrested.
Then he made an astonishing statement, given that he was a State witness and given the State’s theory of the case.
The arrest was made possible, he said, because the construction workers followed the suspicious person from a distance. O’Brien was, he said, so pleased with the successful arrest that he had sent the workers a letter of commendation from the HOA.
The point is that Zimmerman did nothing wrong (or stupid, foolish, etc) by following Martin from a distance. Maybe that's not what you would do. Ok. I'm totally cool with that. But it still doesn't mean Z did anything wrong, foolish, or stupid.